00:00On this day in space.
00:03On November 21st, 1676, the Danish astronomer Ole Røymer discovered the speed of light.
00:10Before Røymer figured it out, scientists thought that light travels instantaneously
00:14or infinitely fast.
00:15Røymer disproved this almost by accident when he was studying Jupiter's moon Io.
00:20He was trying to figure out how long it takes Io to orbit Jupiter in hopes of using it as
00:24a cosmic clock.
00:26He watched Io disappear behind Jupiter and reappear on the other side.
00:30He did this over and over every 42 hours for years.
00:34To his surprise, the timing of the eclipses was not consistent.
00:38When Earth was closest to Jupiter, the eclipses happened 11 minutes early.
00:41Likewise, when the two planets were farthest away, the eclipses were 11 minutes behind
00:46schedule.
00:47Røymer figured out the pattern and made an accurate prediction for Io's eclipse on
00:50November 9th, 1676.
00:53Then on November 21st, he took his findings to the Royal Academy of Sciences and explained
00:57that a finite speed of light must be responsible.
01:00And that's what happened on this day in space.
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